If you have read the papers over the last few weeks, you undoubtedly have stumbled upon several pages pertaining to congressional hearings held on the victims of Gitmo.
Now comes another story -
THE GRIM TRUTH ON GITMO
By MARK GOLDBLATT
Mark Goldblatt teaches at SUNY/FIT.
May 12, 2008 -- ABDULLAH Saleh al-Ajmi was a Kuwaiti soldier who deserted to fight with the Taliban in Afghanistan after the United States invaded that country in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Coalition forces captured him in the Tora Bora region - believed to be the hideout of Osama bin Laden - designated him an "enemy combatant" and shipped him out to the US prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
There he remained until Nov. 3, 2005 - when, despite substantial evidence of his terrorist ties and a history of aggressive behavior at Gitmo, he was sent back to Kuwait.
**************************************************
Innocent people held unjustly, and with the weight of lawyers and the ACLU - with the legal system behind him, Abdullah was released. All a misunderstanding his lawyers had said. He was not fighting, just on his way to see family and friends and caught up, fearful and stuck in a hell hole.
He was freed and went back to Kuwait, then in to Syria, and secreted into Iraq where he blew himself up and killed seven innocent people.
He is finally being held to account for the crimes he committed and the innocents he killed, that is one of those things about Islam and Christinaity you can't escape - judgment, BUT the lawyers and friends who pushed for his release are also guilty of the crimes he committed, for they were warned, but in their haste to free the unjustly accused from the evil US, they ignored evidence and he murdered seven people.
The entire legal process was a farce, and the lawyers and judges who freed him are responsible for the lives of all seven people murdered. They have to answer to a higher judge, and I don't believe He will be interested in excuses word games excuses.
.
Showing posts with label Kuwait. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kuwait. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Kuwait
World NewsReligious hardliners gain in Kuwait
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Saturday's vote isn't likely to quell strife
KUWAIT CITY -- Muslim hardliners made strong gains in Kuwait's parliamentary elections while female candidates failed once again to win any seats, official results showed Sunday.
Religious conservatives, both Sunnis and Shiites, gained two seats to hold 24 - nearly half of the 50-member parliament, according to results read on state-owned Kuwait Television.
Westernized liberals kept their four seats, and came close to sending the first woman to the parliament of this small, oil-rich U.S. ally. Aseel al-Awadi, a 39-year-old philosophy teacher, came eleventh in her district. The first ten were declared winners.
Elections were held after relations between the Cabinet and parliament broke down and Kuwait's ruler dissolved the legislature in March. The outcome of Saturday's polls, however, doesn't bode well for ending those tensions.
Story continues belowAdvertisementKuwaitis voted mostly along tribal and sectarian lines, bringing back incumbents who promised them salary increases and vowed to use public money to forgive consumer debt - moves bitterly opposed by the government.
Those lawmakers are likely to continue their squabbles with the government, which plans to reform the country's economy with unpopular measures like introducing an income tax and privatizing services that have been heavily subsidized for decades.
"We're back to square one," said Shamlan al-Issa, a political science teacher at Kuwait University.
Women, who won the right to vote in Kuwait in 2005, accounted for about 55 percent of the more than 361,000 voters. But none of the 27 female candidates Saturday made it to parliament. Women also failed to get elected in 2006.
The government of Sheik Nasser Al Mohammed Al Sabah has appointed two women as Cabinet members since 2005.
Some candidates blamed the recent political gridlock on struggles within the ruling family, while others said it was because political parties are not officially recognized in Kuwait.
"We expected Kuwaiti voters to be more aware," said Najla al-Naqi, a 42-year-old lawyer who ran for a seat. "We had hoped for new young faces, for one woman at least."
Al-Naqi said she was disappointed as well with a new electoral law that slashed the number of voting precincts from 25 to five, aiming to reduce tribal voting and fraud. "Vote-buying has diminished, but it is not totally gone," she said. "The solution is in Kuwait becoming a single constituency."
(Copyright ©2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Saturday's vote isn't likely to quell strife
KUWAIT CITY -- Muslim hardliners made strong gains in Kuwait's parliamentary elections while female candidates failed once again to win any seats, official results showed Sunday.
Religious conservatives, both Sunnis and Shiites, gained two seats to hold 24 - nearly half of the 50-member parliament, according to results read on state-owned Kuwait Television.
Westernized liberals kept their four seats, and came close to sending the first woman to the parliament of this small, oil-rich U.S. ally. Aseel al-Awadi, a 39-year-old philosophy teacher, came eleventh in her district. The first ten were declared winners.
Elections were held after relations between the Cabinet and parliament broke down and Kuwait's ruler dissolved the legislature in March. The outcome of Saturday's polls, however, doesn't bode well for ending those tensions.
Story continues belowAdvertisementKuwaitis voted mostly along tribal and sectarian lines, bringing back incumbents who promised them salary increases and vowed to use public money to forgive consumer debt - moves bitterly opposed by the government.
Those lawmakers are likely to continue their squabbles with the government, which plans to reform the country's economy with unpopular measures like introducing an income tax and privatizing services that have been heavily subsidized for decades.
"We're back to square one," said Shamlan al-Issa, a political science teacher at Kuwait University.
Women, who won the right to vote in Kuwait in 2005, accounted for about 55 percent of the more than 361,000 voters. But none of the 27 female candidates Saturday made it to parliament. Women also failed to get elected in 2006.
The government of Sheik Nasser Al Mohammed Al Sabah has appointed two women as Cabinet members since 2005.
Some candidates blamed the recent political gridlock on struggles within the ruling family, while others said it was because political parties are not officially recognized in Kuwait.
"We expected Kuwaiti voters to be more aware," said Najla al-Naqi, a 42-year-old lawyer who ran for a seat. "We had hoped for new young faces, for one woman at least."
Al-Naqi said she was disappointed as well with a new electoral law that slashed the number of voting precincts from 25 to five, aiming to reduce tribal voting and fraud. "Vote-buying has diminished, but it is not totally gone," she said. "The solution is in Kuwait becoming a single constituency."
(Copyright ©2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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